Tiernan v. Jackson

30 U.S. 580, 8 L. Ed. 234, 5 Pet. 580, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 30 U.S. 580 (Tiernan v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tiernan v. Jackson, 30 U.S. 580, 8 L. Ed. 234, 5 Pet. 580, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 373 (1831).

Opinion

Story, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court. — This is a writ of error to the circuit court for the district of Maryland, in which the defendant in error was the original plaintiff. The suit was an action for money had and received, brought under the following circumstances : The defend *380 ants, Luke Tiernan & Sons, of Baltimore, were factors of Thomas H. Fletcher, of Nashville, in the state of Tennessee. In the course of then-business transactions, Fletcher became indebted to them, and to another house, in which Luke Tiernan was surviving partner, in a sum of money exceeding $9000. On the 8th of May 1819, Fletcher, through his agent, Jouett F. Fletcher, shipped, at New Orleans, eighty-one hogsheads of tobacco, on board of the brig Struggle, bound for Baltimore, consigned to Tiernan & Sons. The invoice and bill of lading were inclosed in a letter of advice to Tiernan & Sons, by the Struggle: In the invoice, it was stated, that the shipment was made by order of Thomas II. Fletclior, through his agent, Jouett F. Fletcher; and in the bill of lading, that it was for the account and risk of Thomas H. Fletcher, and consigned to Tiernan & Sons. The letter of advice was as follows :

New Orleans, May 8th, 1819.
Messrs. Luke Tiernan & Sons :
Gentlemen: — Herewith we hand you invoice, bill of lading, eighty-one hogsheads of tobacco, for account of Thomas II. Fletcher, by order of Jouett F. Fletcher, which you will please receive and hold subject to the order of the latter. We are yours, &c., McNeill, Fisk & Rutherford,
per Jacob Knapp.

A short time before, there had been a like shipment of tobacco on account of Thomas II. Fletcher, to Tiernan & Sons, by the schooner Mary. The consignment by the Struggle arrived on the 7th of June 1819, sometime after that by the Mary had been received. Previous to the arrival of either * 1 of *these shipments, viz., on the 10th of April 1819, Thomas II. ' Fletcher, at Nashville,' wrote a letter to Tiernan & Sons, inclosing another to his creditors at Baltimore, informing them of his embarrassments, in consequence of the failure of a house at Nashville, and offering- a proposition for the liquidation of their debts. The letter, among other things, stated that his cotton and tobacco at New Orleans had all been shipped, and advances had on it, and that he had received the money arising from the sales and shipments; that he held a large amount of good paper, of the most unquestionable kind, the greater part of which was then due; that he offered to give paper of this description for their claims against him. He then proposed, that the creditors should appoint Mr. Ephraim H. Foster, of Nashville, their agent, to negotiate the business ; and added, “ in all eases such of you as hold my notes must forward them to Mr. Foster, as they must be taken up, when I give him other paper.” Tiernan & Sons, on the same day they received the letter, accepted the proposition, and wrote a letter to that effect. In consequence of this arrangement, Thomas II. Fletcher, on the 21s1 of May 1819, paid to Foster, in promissory notes, the claims of the two houses of the Tiernans, and took receipts in full from Foster, as agent. At the time of this payment and settlement, Tiernan & Sons did not know of the consignment by the Struggle; but Charles Tiernan arrived at Nashville shortly afterwards, and expressed his satisfaction at the mode of payment. At a subsequent period, in July 1819, this payment and settlement were rescinded by the parties, and the receipts given up. But in our view of the case, it is unnecessary to trace these transactions further.

*381 On the 21st of May 1819, Thomas H. Fletcher, being indebted to James Jackson, of Nashville (the plaintiff), drew a bill of exchange in his favor upon Tiernan and Sons, as follows :

“Nashville, May 21st, 1819.
$2400. Sixty days after sight of this my first of exchange (second unpaid), pay to the order of James Jackson, twenty-four hundred dollars, value received. Thomas H. Fletcher.
To Messrs. Luke Tiernan & Sons, Baltimore.”

This bill was presented, and protested for non-acceptance, on the 9th of June 1819 ; and was, at maturity, protested for non-payment. On the same day the bill Uvas drawn, Fletcher drew the following assignment on ¡-*5q4 the back of a duplicate invoice of the shipment by the Struggle. ~

“Nashville, 21st of May 1819.
I assign to James Jackson so much of the proceeds of the sale of the tobacco alluded to in the within invoice, as will amount to $2400 ; to Ingram & Lloyd, as above, $600 ; and the balance, whatever it may be, to G. G. Washington & Co.: and Messrs. Tiernan & Sons will hold the net proceeds of the within invoice subject to the order of the persons above named, as directed above. Thomas H. Fletcher.”

This assignment was not delivered to Jackson until the 26th of the same month ; and all persons named therein were creditors of Fletcher. There are many other facts spread upon the record, but these appear to us all that are material to dispose of the questions argued at the bar.

The first question is, whether the assignment so made to Jackson, on the 19th of May, passed the legal title in the tobacco, so as to make the same, or the proceeds thereof, presently the property of Jackson and the other persons named. This is a question essentially depending upon the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the terms of the assignment; for whatever may be the inaccuracy of expression, or the inaptness of the words used, in a legal view, if the intention to pass the legal title can be clearly discerned, the court will give effect to it, and construe the words accordingly. Thus, if a man grant the profits of his land, it is said, that the land itself passes. Co. Litt. 4 ; Com. Dig. Grant, E. 5. At the time when this assignment was made, the tobacco was in transit'd; and if there had been an absolute assignment of the proceeds, so that the tobacco was immediately put at the risk of the assignee, and the assignor was to have no further control over the management of it, we do not mean to say, that it would not pass the legal title and property in it to the assignee. But can such an intention be gathered from the words used in this instrument ? We think not. The words are, “ I assign, <fcc., so much of the proceeds of the sale of the tobacco, &c., as will amount to $2400.” The parties, then, contemplate a sale, and the assignment is to be, not of the tobacco itself presently, but of a portion of the funds arising from the sale of it, at a future period. „ Could the assignee or assignees have countermanded the consignment *■ to Tiernan & Sons ? Or, putting aside the factor’s claim of a lien, could they have demanded the property of the factors, before the sale? We *382 think such was not the intention of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
30 U.S. 580, 8 L. Ed. 234, 5 Pet. 580, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiernan-v-jackson-scotus-1831.